transfiguration and metempsychosis, 50. The court and Bathurst. -by Mist the Journalist, concerning Mr. Addi- -By Pasquin, of his being in a plot, iii. 179. Her sway in the schools, 149 to 180. And uni-disproved by the testimony of the lords Har- Fleas and verbal critics compared, as equal judges Friendship, understood by Mr. Dennis to be .179. De Foe, Daniel, in what resembled to William French cooks, iv. 553. De Foe, Norton, a scandalous writer, ii. 415. -esteemed by our author, and why, ibid. -and politics, i. 106. ii. 413. -his great loyalty to king George, how a great friend to the stage-and to the -how he proves that none but nonjurors ibid. -His respect to the Bible and Alcoran, ibid. Of opinion that he poisoned Curll, ibid. His accusation of sir Richard Blackmore,- -as no poet, ibid. Furius, Mr. Dennis called so by Mr. Theobald, i. Fleet-ditch, ii. 271. Its nymphs, 333. Discove- Flies, not the ultimate object of human study, iv. G Good nature of our author; instanees of it in this Good sense, grammar and verse, desired to give Gildon (Charles) abused our author in many -printed against Jesus Christ, i. 296. Gentleman, his hymn to his creator, by Welsted, Gazetteers, the monstrous price of their writings, H Dennis, his wonderful Dedication to G. D. Esq. Handel, an excellent musician, banished to Ireland iii. 179. by the English nobility, iv. 65 Heydeggre, a strange bird from Switzerland, i. 290. Horace, censured by Mr. Welsted, Test. -did not know what he was about when he Haywood (Mrs.) What sort of game for her. ii. Hutchinson (John) with his man Julius, a sub- [ Odyssey, falsehoods concerning Mr. P's Proposals 334. disproved by those very Proposals, ibid. never bowed the knce to Sense.. defiles the high places of Geometry. I Index-Learning, the use of it, i. 279. Impudence, celebrated in Mr. Curll, ii. 159. 186. -in Mr. Norton De Foe, ii. 415. Lord Mayor's show, i. 185. Libeller, a Grub-street critic run to seed, iv. 567. Liberty and monarchy, mistaken for one another, Lud (King), ii. 349. Log (King), i. ver. ult. Lintot (Bernard), ii. 53. Laureate; his crown, of what composed, i, 303. M Madmen, two related to Cibber, i. 32. Moore (James) his story of six verses, and of ridi- earl of Peterborough, ibid. -his plagiarisms, some few of them, ibid. and -Erasmus his advice to him, ii. 50. Madness, of what sort Mr. Dennis's was, according to Plato, i. 106. -according to himself, ii. 268. -how allied to Dulness, iii. 15. Mercuries and magazines, i. 42. Oranges, and their use, i. 236. Opera, her advancement, iii. 301. iv. 45, &c. Osborne, bookseller, crowned with a jordan, ii. 190. P Pope, Mr. his Life. Educated by Jesuits-by a par- His death threatened by Dr. Smedley, ibid. Mr. Cooke's of A 106. ii. 413. iticism, Mr. Dennis's, i. Pillory, a post of respect, in the opinion of Mr. -and of Mr. Ward, ibid. Plagiary described, ii. 47 &c. May-pole in the Strand, turned into a church, Priori, arguments à priori not the best to prove a ii. 28. Morris (Besaleel), ii. 126. iii. 168. Monuments of poets, with inscriptions to other Medals, how swallowed and recovered, iv. 375. Nodding, described, ii. 391. Nous, where wanted, iv. 244. Oldmixon (John) abused Mr. Addison and Mr. -abused Mr. Eusden and my Lord Chamber- God, iv. 471. Round house, ii. prope fin. Ralph (James), iii. 165. See Sawney. Roome and Horneck, iii. 152. S T Tibbald, not here of this poem, i. init. Published an edition of Shakespeare, i. 133. Author, secretly an abettor of scurrilities against Mr. P. Vide Testimonies, and List of Books. Thule, a very northern poem, puts out a fire, i. 258. Thunder, how to make it by Mr. Dennis's receipt, ii. 226. Shakespeare, to be spelled always with an e at the end, i. 1. but not with an e in the middle, ibid. An edition of him in marble, ibid. mangled, al-Taylors, a good word for them, against poets and tered, and cut by the players and critics, i. 133. ill paymasters, ii. 118. Very sore still of Tibbald, ibid. Sepulchral lies on church-walls, i. 43. Settle (Elkanah), Mr. Dennis's account of him, iii. 37. And Mr. Welsted's, ibid. Once preferred to Dryden, iii. 37. A party-writer of pamphlets, ibid. and iii. 283. A writer of farces and drolls, and employed at last in Bartholomewfair, iii. 283. Sawncy, a Poem; the author's great ignorance in classical learning, i. 1. in languages, iii. 165. -his praises on himself above Mr. Addison, ibid. Swiss of Heaven, who they are, ii. 358. A slipshod Sibyl, iii. 15. Silenus described, iv. 492. Scholiasts, iii. 191. iv. 211. 232. Supperless, a mistake concerning this word set right with respect to pocts and other temperate students, i. 115. Sevenfold face, who master of it, i. 224. Soul (the vulgar soul) its office, iv. 441. Travelling described, and its advantages, iv. 293, &c. Verbal critics. Two points always to be granted Venice, the city of, for what famous, iv. 308. W Ward (Edw.) a poet and alehouse-keeper in Moorfields, i. 233. What became of his works, ibid. -His high opinion of his namesake, and his re- Weekly Journals, by whom written, ii. 280. Schools, their homage paid to Dulness, and in what, Wizard, his cup, and the strange effects of it, iv. iv. 150, &c. 517, &c. |